Why Illinois Will Rule the Meatless Future
Was Wilken ahead of his time? Since the fall of 2018, Burger King has introduced the soy-based Impossible Burger, White Castle has added the Impossible Slider, and KFC has begun selling the chickenless Beyond Fried Chicken. That means plant-based meats, once on the menu only at vegetarian restaurants, are now in every neighborhood. The Economist called 2019 the year veganism goes mainstream.
For Illinois, which grows more soybeans than any other state, the rise of vegan hamburgers is an Impossible dream. Just as we once dominated the meat industry with the Union Stock Yards, we can dominate the meatless industry with our farms. Illinois is the ideal place to develop this industry, says Vijay Singh, director of the University of Illinoiss Integrated Bioprocessing Research Laboratory in Urbana, which is developing alternative proteins. We have some of the most fertile ground in the world.
Illinoiss soybeans can be converted into vegan eggs and into heme, the additive that gives the Impossible Burger its meaty taste, Singh says. Protein can also be fermented from corn sugar, providing a new market for the states other staple crop which needs a new market now that high-fructose corn syrup is flavoring fewer soft drinks. All the [food] startup culture is happening in California or Massachusetts, but where are they getting all their sugars? asks Singh. The sugars are coming from Illinois. Its a great thing for our corn and soybean farmers.
more: http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/December-2019/Plant-Based-Burgers/
is not good for everybody!
mucifer
(24,935 posts)Budi
(15,325 posts)Just recalling from briefs I've read in the past.
Ok. Just don't call it a burger.
Gross.
mucifer
(24,935 posts)Budi
(15,325 posts)Thanks..
abqtommy
(14,118 posts)in the fertile area where I was (this means that corn and soybeans were being harvested...poorer ground is only good for growing wheat) I visited the staging area in our small town where soybeans were being piled up to create a mound that, if natural, would be described as a hill. (corn went directly to the town's grain elevator)
I asked one local man there how much this pile/hill of soybeans was worth and after thinking a bit he told me "5 Million Dollars"! I was amazed and still am. And the harvest wasn't even over yet... That's a lot of potential food products from one small town/county!
jimfields33
(19,330 posts)I can see that happening. Maybe in 15 years. Did it with trees.